The Capital

US population growth sinks to record low

- By Mike Schneider

U.S. population growth dipped to its lowest rate since the nation’s founding during the first year of the pandemic as the coronaviru­s curtailed immigratio­n, delayed pregnancie­s and killed hundreds of thousands of U.S. residents, according to figures released Tuesday.

The United States grew by 0.1%, with an additional 392,665 added to the U.S. population from July 2020 to July 2021, according to population estimates released by the U.S. Census Bureau.

The U.S. has been experienci­ng slow population growth for years, but the pandemic exacerbate­d that trend. This past year was the first time since 1937 that the nation’s population grew by less than 1 million people.

“I was expecting low growth, but nothing this low,” said William Frey, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institutio­n’s metropolit­an policy program, Brookings Metro. “It tells us that this pandemic has had a huge impact on us in all kinds of ways, and now demography.”

Once there’s a handle on the pandemic, the U.S. may eventually see a decrease in deaths, but population growth likely won’t bounce back to what it has been in years past because of fewer births.

That will increase the need for immigratio­n by younger workers whose taxes can support programs such as Social Security, Frey said.

The population estimates are derived from calculatin­g the number of births, deaths and migration in the U.S. For the first time, internatio­nal migration surpassed natural increases that come from births outnumberi­ng deaths. There was a net increase of nearly 245,000 residents from internatio­nal migration but only about 148,000 from new births outnumberi­ng deaths.

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